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Menu
  • Why Collaboratory
    • What is Collaboratory?
    • Who Benefits
    • Features
  • Research
    • Our Approach
    • Access Data
    • Research Fellows
  • Resources
    • Webinars & Trainings
    • Building Culture
    • Collaboratory Scholars
    • Technical Help
    • Find Your Collaboratory
  • About
    • About Us
    • History
    • Policies & Compliance
    • Contact Us
  • September 20, 2019
Built for higher education by higher education
  • Webinar

(Re)applying for Carnegie: Last Minute Tips & Tricks

Description

This webinar offered strategies to gather data for Carnegie, identify tips for completing the application, and communicate the value of data collection.

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A recorded version of this presentation is available.

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Presented By:

Dr. Emily Janke
  • Co-Creator and Consultant, Collaboratory
  • Director, Institute for Community & Economic Engagement
  • Associate Professor, Peace and Conflict Studies
  • University of North Carolina Greensboro

Emily M. Janke is the founding director of the Institute for Community and Economic Engagement (ICEE) and an associate professor in the Peace and Conflict Studies department at UNC Greensboro. Dr. Janke has held key leadership roles to support the fair treatment of community engaged scholarship in promotion and tenure policy and practices, track and monitor community engagement and public service, develop a university-wide website and Referral Desk to advance communication and potential for collaboration, and support department-level community engagement partnerships.Janke served as chair of the Community Engagement Metrics Task Force for the University of North Carolina General Administration.

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Her teaching and scholarship explore multiple aspects of community and economic engagement, including community-university relationships and partnerships, institutional culture and change strategies, and the role of reciprocity, communication and tension in collaborative relationships for public good. Janke is a member of the National Advisory Panel for the 2015 Elective Community Engagement Classification process. She is a visiting fellow with the New England Resource Center for Higher Education (NERCHE) where she is a member of The Next Generation Engagement Project, a collaboration between NERCHE, the American Association of State Colleges and Universities (AASCU), and Imagining America. She received the Early Career Researcher Award (2012) and the Dissertation Award (2008) given by the International Association for Research on Service-Learning and Community Engagement. She received the John Saltmarsh Award for Emerging Civic Engagement Leaders (2012) given by the American Democracy Project of AASCU, and the Sustainer Award (2014) given by North Carolina Campus Compact.

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